Orde wingate and the british army, 1922-1944: Military Thought and Practice Compared and Contrasted



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The operation was, in effect the old cavalry raid of military history on the enemy's communications, which, to be effective against a stout hearted opponent, must be made in tactical co ordination with a main attack elsewhere.

  Field Marshal Viscount Slim, commenting on Operation Longcloth59


From a point of view of statecraft, you do not try to make heroes of guerrillas.... [B]ecause if you do, every young man wants to copy that revolutionary or guerrilla. What you must do is give all the kudos to your regular army, just like the Tsar did on the retreat from Moscow...

  Brigadier Michael Calvert 60


[A] masterful description of manoeuvre warfare...

  General Sir Michael Rose, on Calvert's Prisoners of Hope61

There seems to be little agreement even among Wingate’s own colleagues and contemporaries as to where his military ideas and practice fit. Kirby described the Chindits as guerrilla forces; to Fergusson, the proud Highlander, Wingate was a leader of irregular forces in the tradition of Robert the Bruce and Bonnie Prince Charlie, while the novelist John Masters, who was Brigade Major, then acting commander of 111th Brigade on the second Chindit operation, claimed specifically they were based on the Long Range Desert Group.62 Subsequent authors can be divided broadly into those who view Wingate as a leader of guerrilla irregulars, those who see him as attempting to wage guerrilla operations with specially trained regular troops, and those, usually military officers, writing in staff college papers or publications based upon them, who attempt to project military doctrine of their own time onto Wingate’s operations, with Wingate portrayed as ‘pioneering’ said doctrine. Among the ‘Wingate as guerrilla’ school, Michael Elliot Bateman placed Wingate firmly in the context of ‘people’s war’ while Robert Asprey and David Shirreff also described Wingate purely as a leader of irregulars.63 Yet, Otto Heilbrunn, John Terraine and John W Gordon placed Wingate firmly in the ‘special forces’ camp, Heilbrunn in particular seeing him as one of several commanders of the Second World War creating special units to execute guerrilla style warfare deep in the enemy’s rear.64 This has some support from the official historian of British airborne forces, Lieutenant Colonel Terence Otway, who treated Thursday as a massive and protracted airborne operation.65 Of those seeing Wingate as a pioneer of ‘advanced’ forms of warfare, Major Luigi Rossetto of the Canadian Army argued specifically against the ‘Wingate as guerrilla’ school, claiming that Wingate was attempting a practical application of Basil Liddell Hart’s ‘Theory of the Indirect Approach’; Robert Lyman’s military biography of Slim, from 2004, also attempted to place the Chindit operations in the context of Slim’s wider application of a form of ‘indirect approach’.66 Conversely, Major John Atkins, another British Army officer, has contended that Wingate pioneered ‘nonlinear noncontiguous military operations’, an apparent staple of post 1990s American military doctrine.67 It appears, therefore, that there are multiple interpretations of Wingate’s military ideas and practice, and with little agreement between them.

The closest to a consensus falls among those who portray Wingate as a guerrilla leader. Elliot Bateman’s anthology, The Fourth Dimension of War, was produced in 1970, against the background of the Vietnam War. His keynote essay dwelt upon how Sun Tzu’s The Art of War had influenced ‘people’s war’, by which he meant explicitly the collapse of enemy resistance via a mixture of selective military action, guerrilla warfare, espionage and subversion as, he argued, had been practiced by Mao Tse tung in the 1930s and 40s and Vo Nguyen Giap between then and 1970.68 Wingate’s operations in Ethiopia and Burma, and his theory of long range penetration, were presented as examples of Sun Tzu’s concept of cheng and ch’i, sometimes translated as ‘ordinary’ and ‘extraordinary’ force; as Elliot Bateman explained it: ‘[T]he extraordinary or indirect force (known as the ‘ch’i’ force) act where and when their blows are not anticipated, while the normal force (known as the ‘cheng’ force) fixes or distracts the enemy’; depending upon circumstances, either may be the decisive force, but Elliot Bateman clearly endorsed Sun Tzu’s exhortation to ‘use the normal force to engage; use the extraordinary to win.’69 While guerrillas could act in either role, Elliot Bateman argued that Gideon Force and the Chindits represented a ch’i force in action, with the rest of Slim’s forces in Burma being the cheng.70 However, there were differences: Wingate’s operations involved infiltrating the enemy rear with specialist regular troops, whereas ‘classical’ guerrilla warfare involved raising the penetration force from the local populace; moreover, whereas ‘classical’ guerrilla forces required the unqualified support of the majority of the local populace, long range penetration forces did not.71 Whether Wingate encountered the ideas of Sun Tzu, perhaps via the 1910 translation by Lionel Giles, is unknown, and, in the absence of any direct evidence, speculation is all that is possible.

Robert Asprey published War in the Shadows in 1975 with a similar remit to Elliot Bateman: ‘to explain the Vietnam war to American readers in the historical terms of guerrilla warfare.’72 Asprey, too, assessed Wingate as a guerrilla commander, but was perhaps more prosaic than Elliot Bateman, providing a highly critical narrative of Wingate’s operations (and his behaviour), concluding by contrasting what he called the ‘qualitative’ ideas of Wingate with the ‘saturation’ approach of TE Lawrence, a distant relative of Wingate to whom this thesis will return. Asprey did not explain his terms and definitions, but it can be inferred from his text that he understood Wingate’s approach to centre upon small units of hand picked and highly trained men, striking at key targets, while Lawrence aimed at infesting enemy held areas with as large a number of partisans as possible, to pin and distract the maximum number of enemy troops.73

David Shirreff’s Bare Feet and Bandoliers, from 1995, is the only published book length history of Wingate’s operations in Ethiopia. Shirreff did not theorise about the origins of Wingate’s ideas, but he was unequivocal that Wingate was attempting a guerrilla war using local irregulars, comparing the Ethiopian ‘patriots’ with the Spanish guerrillas of the Peninsular War of the 1800s and Lawrence’s Arabs. He argued that guerrillas were used most effectively to attack enemy lines of supply; cooperation with regular forces usually impaired them, but ‘the most effective patriot forces were those which had a hard core of regulars’, Shirreff contending that Wingate’s aim was to insert just such a ‘hard core’ consisting of Gideon Force, which consisted of two battalions of Ethiopian and Sudanese regular troops under British officers.74 These authors portray Wingate as a new kind of military leader, attempting to create ‘extraordinary’ forces, based upon guerrillas organised around a smaller number of specialist regular troops, to wage a protracted campaign in the enemy rear.

The second group of authors has chosen to concentrate on the ‘special force’ characteristics of Wingate’s operations, although they do not ignore the guerrilla aspects, either. Otto Heilbrunn’s main academic interest was guerrilla warfare, as practiced by communist movements in the 1950s and 60s, but his Warfare in the Enemy's Rear, from 1963 dealt with ‘The forces of the rear...the airborne troops, the Special Forces, the partisans and certain elements of the air forces’ in the Second World War.75 Yet, he placed Wingate’s Chindits in two contexts, the first being the many ‘special’ units   Commandos, Long Range Desert Group, Special Air Service   raised by the British in the Second World War, the second being the history of guerrilla warfare.76 The Chindits were regular soldiers trained to use guerrilla methods, ‘they would harass the enemy in guerrilla fashion, they would weaken him by destroying his supply dumps and supply lines, and they would tie down his forces which would have to protect their communications...and hunt the intruders.’77 However, Wingate moved the Chindits towards ‘conventional’ operations, aimed at seizing and holding ground, on Operation Thursday, which hinged upon Strongholds, fortified bases, supplied by air, from which Chindit columns sortied against Japanese communications in the early stages of the operation.78 Heilbrunn argued that the impact of this was to reduce the number of Chindits available for aggressive operations, most of them now being tied up in defending the Strongholds. Overall, however, Wingate’s main contribution to military thought, according to Heilbrunn, ‘was his demonstration that professional soldiers could profitably adopt guerrillaism [sic] and we have drawn the conclusion that they [the Chindits] could have disorganized [sic] and demoralized [sic] the enemy, as they were ordered to, had they been given the chance.’79

John W Gordon’s essay on Wingate in the 1991 anthology, Churchill’s Generals, placed Wingate even more firmly in the Special Forces camp, Gordon stating that:

To look at Wingate is to look at the British style of warfare. For, while virtually all major combatants in World War II experimented to some degree with so called "special forces", it was the British experiment with them that holds pride of place both as to scale and expectations. Moreover...Orde Wingate must be seen as Winston Churchill’s paramount theorist and most committed advocate of their use.80

Gordon traced the British interest in ‘unconventional operations’ from Lawrence to Churchill, who, in the post Dunkirk period saw them as the best means to strike back at the Germans physically and, perhaps more important at that stage of the war, psychologically. Churchill, he claimed, was inspired by the ‘conjunct operations’ of the Napoleonic Wars and by the supposed extensive use of Special Forces by the Germans in the invasions of 1940, this leading to the creation of the Commandos and SOE.81 Wingate created the largest special force of the war, with Churchill’s backing, and developed a doctrine for its use; however, ‘The units...would not be made up of guerrillas, with their free and easy ways, but of soldiers acting with the discipline, training and reliability of regular formations.’82 Heilbrunn and Gordon therefore agree that Wingate attempted to use specialist regular units to wage guerrilla warfare behind enemy lines.

Interestingly, the one published analysis of Wingate’s operations by a true peer   a British officer of similar age, rank and experience   concentrated exclusively on their ‘regular’ aspects. Lieutenant Colonel Terence Otway commanded 9th Battalion, the Parachute Regiment, in the Normandy landings of June 1944, where he won the Distinguished Service Order and lost most of his battalion storming the German gun batteries at Merville on 6 June itself. In 1951, he was commissioned to author the Official History of British airborne forces in the Second World War, this work being significant in presenting an assessment of Wingate, from another official historian, at odds with Kirby’s. Otway’s remit was to extract ‘lessons learned’ from the British use of airborne forces in the war, and Thursday was analysed accordingly, as an airborne operation, reliant on air support and supply. Otway began by commenting that Longcloth ‘showed clearly the scope offered for applying new methods in the Burma theatre...prov[ing] that the power of supply and control [of behind the lines operations] was limited only by the number of aircraft and trained crews available.’83 There followed a narrative of the planning and execution of Thursday, stressing its air aspects   air supply, casualty evacuation, close air support, construction of airfields in hostile territory by airborne engineers   and also of the Stronghold concept. Otway emphasised the operation’s commencing with air landings, resulting in three brigades ‘embedded behind the enemy’s lines and more or less at the centre of four Japanese divisions’.84 Subsequent operations by these brigades created a ‘clamp’ upon Japanese communications in northern Burma, undone when the Chindits were ordered north to support Stilwell.85 Otway evidently did not view the Chindits as a purely guerrilla force, his narrative emphasising the fierce, protracted battles taking place around some of the Strongholds, and the role of close air support by the Air Commando in inflicting mass destruction upon the Japanese. In Otway’s professional opinion, the Chindits were an air inserted all arms main force unit capable of major engagements inflicting heavy casualties upon the Japanese.86 Moreover, they were successful in this role, Otway concluding that:
The main lesson that emerged from these operations was that Wingate’s theories on Long Range Penetration...had proved correct in detail....His force had gnawed a hole in the entrails of three Japanese divisions which had weakened them to such an extent that their eventual collapse was complete.87

Moreover, Thursday tested concepts useful in future airborne operations. To Otway, therefore, Wingate was a successful theoretician and practitioner of airborne warfare.

Another interpretation of Wingate’s ideas was presented by Luigi Rossetto in 1982, in his Major General Orde Charles Wingate and the Development of Long Range Penetration, the published version of his master’s thesis for the Royal Military College of Canada, completed in 1967. Rossetto contended that Wingate’s concept of long range penetration was an offshoot of Basil Liddell Hart’s ‘strategy of the indirect approach’, defeating the enemy by following the line of least resistance to his most vulnerable areas, there to ‘dislocate’ his forces from their command, control and supply.88 There is some historical evidence to support this idea. Wingate and Liddell Hart met in 1938 and corresponded for some time afterwards, Wingate sending Liddell Hart copies of his training notes and memoranda for his operations in Palestine, and Liddell Hart providing Wingate a letter of introduction to Churchill; Liddell Hart also claimed that Wingate’s actions in Palestine had been influenced by his ideas.89 Yet, Rossetto’s work, in published form, was largely biographical and narrative and Wingate’s military ideas formed one theme among several. However, Rossetto did present the hypothesis that Wingate was attempting a new form of warfare, combining the ‘indirect approach’ with his own ideas and resembling the Soviet concept of ‘deep battle’, associated most closely with Marshal Mikhail Tukachevsky. Therefore, according to Rossetto, authors who judge Wingate simply as a guerrilla leader or as a commander of Special Forces miss the point.90

This is original, but, for reasons discussed already, Rossetto had to rely upon the works of Mosley, Sykes, Slim and Kirby, papers available at the Public Record Office at the time, and some material on Palestine he obtained via contacts at RMCC to support his case. Inevitably, therefore, his hypothesis was based largely upon secondary sources, and he was unable to establish any direct link between Wingate’s ideas and Liddell Hart’s, apart from the latter’s own testimony, nor did he demonstrate empirically how the Chindit operations might have been the ‘indirect approach’ in action. The possibility of a link between Wingate’s military thought and Liddell Hart’s had been touched upon by Shelford Bidwell in his history of Thursday, and dismissed: ‘[I]t must be said that Wingate was no "Liddell Hartist". He was a "Wingate ist": in his arrogance he admitted no mentor’, an observation borne out by Wingate’s never citing any source but himself for his ideas.91 Nonetheless, the idea that there was a possible link between the indirect approach and Wingate’s concept of long range penetration had become a theme in the literature.



This theme was taken up by Robert Lyman, a former British Army officer, in Slim, Master of War, in 2004. Lyman’s claim was that it was Slim who continued the tradition of Liddell Hart into the war in Burma and beyond: ‘Slim’s real contribution to the art of war was to provide a practical bridge between the original theory of the "indirect approach" expounded by Major General JFC Fuller, Sir Basil Liddell Hart and other members of the "English" school of military strategy during the inter war era, and the modern [post 1990s] doctrine of "manoeuvre warfare"’, encapsulated by Lyman as ‘the concentration of force to achieve surprise, psychological shock, physical momentum and moral dominance’ and which he saw as demonstrated in Slim’s victories at Imphal and Kohima in 1944 and Meiktila in 1945.93 The role of Wingate in this was to organise ‘long range "hit and run" type operations [sic] behind enemy lines’, in opposition to Slim’s approach, which was to mass the greatest British force available against Japanese weakness.94 Lyman clearly viewed Wingate as more of a media and propaganda creation than a serious strategist: in his view, Longcloth was carried out without strategic rationale and was a far from unambiguous vindication of Wingate’s ideas, but was built into a major victory by GHQ India in order to boost morale. After this, the resources directed to Wingate by a grateful Churchill resulted in Wingate’s ideas growing out of control, Wingate wishing to initiate large scale operations on the Japanese lines of communication, yet ‘Slim knew that Wingate could never hope to achieve the decisive advantage he sought. His aircraft supplied troops, light in artillery and bereft of armour, would exhaust themselves quickly’, something Lyman saw happening in the latter stages of Thursday, another operation launched without ‘strategic imperative’.95 Wingate was in ‘strategic competition’ with Slim and is, in some ways, the ‘villain’ of Lyman’s book. The resources diverted to Thursday, ‘a colossal military blunder’, according to Lyman, were sources unavailable for Slim’s planned decisive battle on the Imphal Plain, but Slim had no choice but to accede, due to pressure from Churchill; Wingate’s ‘arrogant assumption that nothing else in the region mattered, and...the offensive methods he used to obtain what he wanted’ led to numerous clashes with the stoic Slim, who seems to have understood the role of LRP better than Wingate himself.96 If Rossetto’s hypothesis is combined with Lyman’s, this could be portrayed as a clash between two different interpretations of the indirect approach, were it not for Lyman’s failure to establish empirically any link between Slim and Liddell Hart (and there is no record of any direct correspondence between the two at the Liddell Hart Centre for Military Archives at King’s College). Moreover, Lyman contradicted himself: in his introduction, Slim was clearly influenced by the ‘English manoeuvrist’ school of strategy, the indirect approach in particular, yet, later, he merely shows a ‘common ancestry’ with this ‘school’, arising from ‘the demands of intelligent soldiering’ rather than any theoretical input from elsewhere.97 Moreover, his views on Wingate and LRP echoed largely those of Slim in Defeat into Victory, a work he inevitably cited heavily. Nevertheless, this is another work placing Wingate in a doctrinal context centering on Liddell Hart.

An alternative ‘placing’ of Wingate was made by another British Army officer, Major John Atkins, in a monograph produced for the US Army Command and General Staff College, arguing that operations in Burma pioneered another key concept of post 1990s military doctrine, expressed in modern US military jargon as ‘nonlinear, noncontiguous operations’. Although no clear definition was provided, from the text it can be deduced that these are operations in which units move and fight in widely dispersed formations. Rather than forming a solid ‘front’, facing the enemy, they aim to strike him in depth, using seaborne or airborne movement, and air support and air supply in lieu of conventional artillery and communications respectively, as Atkins argued, the US military have attempted in the post 2001 ‘War on Terror.’98 Wingate’s Chindits pioneered this type of operation, claims Atkins, and, perhaps unsurprisingly for a student at US Army Staff College, he suggests Wingate’s inspiration may have been the Confederate cavalry raiders of the American Civil War.99 Like these forces, Wingate’s initial aim was to fill the enemy rear areas with mobile units, which would concentrate to attack key enemy installations, then disperse and use their superior mobility to avoid retribution.100 From the attachment of the Air Commando, these operations were supported effectively by battlefield airpower, Atkins describing the accuracy of air attacks on Thursday as ‘superb’.101 Overall, the Chindit operations ‘demonstrated that mobile, noncontiguous, nonlinear operations could succeed when supported by airpower’, setting an example soon followed by all British forces in Burma.102 In contrast with Lyman, Atkins not only saw Wingate as playing a valuable part in the British victory in Burma, but as a forerunner of twenty first century warfare.

The main impression gained from a survey of works trying to analyse Wingate’s military ideas is of lack of consensus, and repeated attempts to project the ideas and concepts of others onto his. To some authors, Wingate was a guerrilla commander, to others, an airborne commander or practitioner of manoeuvre warfare; he might also be a disciple of Robert the Bruce, Nathan Bedford Forrest or Basil Liddell Hart, according to source. Moreover, most of these works consist of interpretations of the published work either of Wingate’s peers and contemporaries or his biographers – and even those who knew him best could not agree on what he was trying to do or what spurred him to do it. This begs the question of what a survey of Wingate’s own papers and other contemporary documents might yield that is different from this, leading to the main theme of this thesis.

The thesis

This thesis investigates the question, how far did the military thought and practice of Major General OC Wingate part company with British Army doctrine of his time? This melds the controversy over Wingate’s ideas with the debate over their origin. The principal contention of this thesis is that the answer to this question is ‘Not as much as the previous literature has argued’, that Wingate’s thought and practice do not represent any significant departure from British Army war fighting methods of his time, but derived from a number of methods and practices prevalent in the Army of the period, and which were utilised as part of their military strategy by several British theatre commanders.

Methodology was straightforward, consisting of establishing the strategic situation faced by British forces in the theatres where Wingate was deployed and the ‘official’ British strategic and operational solutions to this, followed by examining Wingate’s proposals, allowing comparison and contrast. This entailed a survey of Wingate’s papers in the Imperial War Museum and British Library and papers and correspondence held in other collections. Alongside this went a review of official British government and military papers, principally in the National Archives at Kew and the Churchill Archive at Cambridge, in order to ascertain the state of British Army doctrine for the span of Wingate’s career, 1922 to 1944, alongside its approach to operations in this period. This was supplemented by interviews with a number of former Chindits and, most importantly, Sir Douglas Dodds Parker, who served as Wingate’s staff captain in Sudan and Ethiopia in 1940 41, before going on to become a senior operative with SOE and a minister in the Conservative government of 1951-1956. The thesis therefore combines published and unpublished material, including a higher proportion authored by Wingate himself than hitherto, with primary source oral testimony from contemporaries, at least one of them a significant practitioner of unorthodox warfare himself.

From this, a different pattern has emerged than found in material published hitherto. There appears to be no single discrete model for Wingate’s operations, no ‘mould’ into which they can be neatly fitted. Rather than being identifiable as distinct guerrilla, airborne or special forces, Wingate’s long range penetration operations combined all three methods, relying upon a core of lightly armed regular forces, some inserted by air in later operations, cooperating with local irregulars and supported liberally by airpower, operating against vital targets in the enemy rear, thus forcing him to disperse his strength and be destroyed in detail, either by Allied heavy forces or LRP forces themselves. Wingate’s ideas evolved organically from his time in Palestine onwards, and had multiple roots. His military experience was gained exclusively in or around Britain’s imperial possessions in Africa, Asia and the Middle East. The British Army of the time specialised in the ‘small wars’ prevalent in these areas, and had developed coherent operational practices involving all arms columns penetrating rapidly into enemy territory, and, as early as the 1920s, was experimenting with air supply and close air support of these columns. There was also a long-established practice of using locally recruited volunteers, under British officers, for scouting and ambush work in territory the enemy thought safe. None of these ideas were new, and were all apparent in Wingate’s operations.

The use of combined arms columns operating in cooperation with local irregulars was extended into operations against regular armies from 1917 onwards, most notably by Wingate’s distant   and much loathed   relative, TE Lawrence. Lawrence was one of the inspirations for the doctrine for directing armed resistance in Axis occupied territory devised in 1939 by Lieutenant Colonel Colin Gubbins, then with the MI(R) covert operations organisation of the British War Office, and applied by G(R)   an offshoot of MI(R)   in planning for Ethiopia. It was this operation that Wingate took over in late 1940, and his campaign in Ethiopia was based clearly upon his own interpretation of the existing doctrine, modified by conditions he discovered there. Wingate’s writings indicate that the operational concept he developed subsequently, long range penetration, was rooted explicitly in what happened in Ethiopia, and also that he intended to apply this model in Burma until conditions there modified it further. Wingate’s operational thought and practice was therefore multi causal and evolving constantly; it also accorded with a number of other practices of the British Army of his time and before.

The structure of the thesis reflects this. The next chapter summarises British Army doctrine in the inter war period in both ‘small’ and ‘large’ wars, and, in the case of the former, focuses on the evolution in thought from Major General Charles Callwell to Major General Charles Gwynne, authors of the two most influential works on this type of operation in this period. The following chapter summarises Wingate’s experiences in Sudan, in 1928 1933, and its possible influence on what came after, before discussing Wingate’s opinions of Lawrence. Chapter Four covers Wingate’s time in Palestine, 1936 39, and demonstrates that Wingate’s activities with the Special Night Squads were far from the departure from British counterinsurgent methods that the literature sometimes made them seem, but actually formed an integral part of a British military strategy which proved highly successful, defeating the Arab revolt by 1939. That Wingate’s thought and practice demonstrably fit into contemporary British strategy is also a theme of Chapter Five, which covers Wingate’s operations in Ethiopia in 1940 41. The chapter demonstrates that the use of specialist forces to wage irregular and guerrilla warfare against Germany, Italy and their occupied territories was a cornerstone of British strategy in this period, principally because their expulsion from the Continent gave them little other option. Such forces were used also in North and East Africa for a number of reasons, not least of which was the enthusiasm of the British theatre commander, Wavell, for this kind of unit. The next two chapters deal with the first and second Chindit operations respectively, and demonstrate that the Chindit concept evolved organically from a model resembling the operations Wingate had commanded in Ethiopia, based upon the different geography, both physical and human, of Southeast Asia, the nature of the Japanese as an opponent, and the greater resources available. Indeed, it was due to the latter that Wingate’s plans not only evolved, but escalated, from his original scheme, involving auxiliary operations combining small numbers of British troops with local partisans, to a plan to inflict decisive, theatre level defeat upon the Japanese through a major air land offensive. Wingate hoped to prove this final concept on Operation Thursday, the operation on which he was killed. The final chapter attempts to analyse and establish Wingate’s true ‘place’ in British military history, based upon the new evidence in this thesis, before reviewing the literature in the light of this new assessment and suggesting avenues for further research. The thesis, therefore, centres upon the argument that Wingate presented a coherent, evolving model of warfare, derived from previous methods used by the British Army in extra European operations, distilled through his own experience, and fitting into British strategy in the theatres where he was active, apart from a period at the end of this life.

It is essential, therefore, to establish the state of British Army ‘doctrine’   presuming there was one   in the period of Wingate’s career, in order to demonstrate just what Wingate was parting from or agreeing with. The next chapter will consist of a review of the relevant British military procedures and fighting instructions of the day, as planned for major wars and actually practiced in the colonial ‘small wars’ in which Wingate cut his teeth.
NOTES   CHAPTER ONE
1. Quoted in John Bierman and Colin Smith, Fire in the Night: Wingate of Burma, Ethiopia and Zion (London: Macmillan 2000), p.379

2. Julian Thompson, The Imperial War Museum Book of the War in Burma 1942 1945 (London; Sidgwick & Jackson 2002), p.62

3. Yigal Allon, The Making of Israel’s Army (London: Valentine, Mitchell 1980), pp.8-10; for Sharon’s opinion of Wingate, see Brian Bond, Liddell Hart: A Study of his Military Thought (London: Cassell 1977), pp.247 248; for Dayan’s, see in particular Moshe Dayan, Story of My Life (London: Weidenfeld & Nicholson 1976), pp.44 48 and Robert Slater, Warrior Statesman: The Life of Moshe Dayan (London: Robson 1992), p.47

4. See David Ben Gurion, ‘Our Friend: What Wingate did for us’, Jewish Observer and Middle East Review No.27, September 1963, LHCMA File 15/3/311; Dayan, Story of My Life, pp.45 48

5. Colonel OC Wingate, ‘The Ethiopian Campaign, August 1940 to June 1941’, several copies held in the IWM Wingate Abyssinia Papers; the best published history of this operation is that by David Shirreff, Bare Feet and Bandoliers: Wingate, Sandford, the Patriots and the part they played in the Liberation of Ethiopia (London: Ratcliffe 1995); see also Wilfred Thesiger, The Life of My Choice (London: Collins 1987)

6. Wingate, ‘Ethiopian Campaign’, pp.1, 4 5, 14 15; Colonel OC Wingate, ‘Appreciation of the Ethiopia Campaign’, several copies held in the IWM Wingate Abyssinia Papers, pp.3 7, 10, 13 14 7. Vice Admiral the Earl Mountbatten of Burma, Report to the Combined Chiefs of Staff by the Supreme Commander South East Asia 1943 1945 (London: HMSO 1951), Section A, Para.5, Section B, Para.36

8. Richard Rhodes James, Chindit (London: John Murray 1980), pp.90 91; Christopher Sykes, Orde Wingate (London: Collins 1959), p.378, 380, 436, 442 443

9. Major General S Woodburn Kirby et al, History of the Second World War, The War Against Japan, Volume III: The Decisive Battles (London: HMSO 1961) [hereafter OHJ3]; Field Marshal Sir William Slim, Defeat Into Victory (London: Cassell 1956)

10. Slim, Defeat into Victory, pp.218 220; ‘LRP Groups   Comment on note of DSD by Colonel OC Wingate’, IWM Wingate Chindit Papers, Box I

11. Currently displayed in the Imperial War Museum, London

12. Wingate to Central Command, Agra, of 15 August 1942, IWM Wingate Chindit Papers, Box I; Dayan, Story of My Life, p.47; Philip Stibbe, Return via Rangoon (London: Leo Cooper 1995), p.19

13. Author’s interview with Sir Douglas Dodds Parker, of G(R) and Special Operations Executive, and Wingate’s Staff Captain in East Africa, 25 August 2004; Wilfred Burchett, Wingate’s Phantom Army (London: Frederick Muller 1946), p.43; Michael Calvert, Fighting Mad: One Man’s Guerrilla War (London: Jarrold 1964), p.113; Stibbe, Return via Rangoon, pp.20 21

14. Sykes, Wingate, p.249; Thesiger, Life of My Choice, p.320

15. See Wingate, ‘Appreciation of the Ethiopia Campaign’, p.16, where he refers to General Sir Alan Cunningham as a ‘military ape’; see also Shelford Bidwell, The Chindit War: The Campaign in Burma 1944 (London: Book Club Associates 1979, pp.38 44; Slim, Defeat into Victory, pp.218 219, 220; Thesiger, Life of My Choice, pp.319 320, 330, 332 333, 336, 349 350

16. Anonymous, ‘Narrative of Events: May to November, 1941’, IWM Wingate Abyssinia Papers, Box II

17. Tom Segev, One Palestine, Complete: Jews and Arabs under the British Mandate (London: Abacus 2000), pp.430, 587-588

18. Duncan Anderson, ‘Slim’, in John Keegan (Editor), Churchill's Generals (London: Abacus 1999), pp.315 316; Julian Thompson, The Imperial War Museum Book of War Behind Enemy Lines (London: Sidgwick & Jackson 1998), pp.135 140, 179 180, 185, 256, 421, War in Burma, pp.60 68

19. Sir Robert Thompson, Make for the Hills (London: Leo Cooper 1989), pp.71 76; Derek Tulloch, Wingate in Peace and War (London: Macdonald 1972); Michael Calvert, Prisoners of Hope (London: Jonathan Cape 1952), especially pp.283 303; Peter Mead, Orde Wingate and the Historians (Braunton: Merlin 1987); David Rooney, Wingate and the Chindits: Redressing the Balance (London: Arms & Armour 1994)

20. Bierman and Smith, Fire in the Night, p.390; Royle, Orde Wingate, p.327

21. Luigi Rossetto, Major General Orde Charles Wingate and the Development of Long Range Penetration (Manhattan, Kansas: MA/AH 1982); Colonel Prithvi Nath VSM, Wingate: His Relevance to Contemporary Warfare (New Delhi: Sterling 1990); the other passages cited are in Kirby, OHJ, pp.486 492; Calvert, Prisoners of Hope, pp.274 280; Mosley, Gideon Goes to War, pp.67 69, 126 131

22. For example, Royle, Orde Wingate, pp.118 119 for some of his findings, 332 333, 336 for his sources

23. Major OC Wingate, ‘Sand model lectures illustrating strategy and tactics of Ethiopian Campaign, Lecture No.1   First Principles’, G(R), 11 January 1941, IWM Wingate Abyssinia Papers, Box I, p.1

24. Kirby, OHJ3, p.223

25. R Thompson, Make for the Hills, p.73

26. Charles Rolo, Wingate's Raiders (London: George Harrap 1944), pp.18, 25

27. Bernard Fergusson, Beyond the Chindwin: Being an Account of the Adventures of Number Five Column of the Wingate Expedition into Burma, 1943 (London: Collins 1945)

28. Brigadier BE Fergusson DSO, ‘Behind the Enemy's Lines in Burma’, Journal of the Royal United Services Institute, August 1946, p.357

29. Bernard Fergusson, The Wild Green Earth (London: Collins 1947), especially pp.139 146

30. Calvert, Prisoners of Hope, p.283

31. Kirby, OHJ3, pp.p.219

32. Ibid, p.219

33. Ibid, p.221

34. Ibid, p.221 222

35. Ibid, p.222

36. Ibid, pp.442 443

37. Slim, Defeat into Victory, pp.162, 218 220

38. Ibid, p.162

39. Ibid, p.218

40. Ibid, pp.162 163

41. Ibid, pp.218 219

42. Ibid, pp.547 548

43. See www.awm.gov.au/korea/faces/burchett.htm

44. Burchett, Wingate’s Phantom Army, pp.45 48, 49

45. Mosley, Gideon Goes to War, pp.46 49, 52 54, 72

46. Ibid, pp.97 110

47. Mead, Wingate and the Historians, pp.18 19

48. Tulloch, Wingate in Peace and War, especially pp.149 174

49. Ibid, pp.194 195, 256, 259

50. Mead, Wingate and the Historians, p.19

51. Ibid, p.14

52. Ibid, pp.143 144

53. Ibid, pp.163 178

54. Ibid, pp.115 116, 152 153

55. Robert Thompson, Defeating Communist Insurgency: The Lessons of Malaya and Vietnam (New York: Frederick A Praeger 1966)

56. Mead, Wingate and the Historians, pp.19 20, 179 184, 195 196

57. Thompson, Make for the Hills, pp.71 72

58. Ibid, p.76

59. Slim, Defeat into Victory, p.163

60. Interviewed on Orde Wingate: Military Genius? (BBC TV 1976)

61. Foreword to Calvert, Prisoners of Hope, p.xv

62. Kirby, OHJ3, pp.222 223; Fergusson, Wild Green Earth, pp.263 265; John Masters, The Road Past Mandalay (London: Michael Joseph 1961), p.134

63. Michael Elliot Bateman, ‘The nature of People's War’, in The Fourth Dimension of Warfare, Volume I   Intelligence, Subversion, Resistance (Manchester: Manchester University Press 1970), pp.141 143; Robert B Asprey, War in the Shadows (London: Little, Brown 1994), pp.423 427, 429 433; Shirreff, Bare Feet and Bandoliers, especially pp.8 14

64. Terraine interviewed on Orde Wingate: Military Genius?; Otto Heilbrunn, Warfare in the Enemy’s Rear (London: George Allen & Unwin 1963); John W Gordon, ‘Wingate’, in Keegan (Ed), Churchill’s Generals, pp.282 284, 294 296

65. Lieutenant Colonel TBH Otway, The Second World War 1939 1945, Army: Airborne Forces (London: IWM 1990), pp.356 377

66. Robert Lyman, Slim, Master of War: Burma and the Birth of Modern Warfare (London: Constable & Robinson 2004); Rossetto, Wingate and the Development of Long Range Penetration, especially pp.v vii, 24 27, 455 457

67. Major John Atkins RLC, ‘A Model for Modern Nonlinear Noncontiguous Operations: The War in Burma, 1943 to 1945’ (Fort Leavenworth: School of Advanced Military Studies, United States Army Command and General Staff College 2003), especially pp.9 23

68. Elliot Bateman, ‘Nature of People’s War’, pp.138 139

69. Ibid, pp.141 143

70. Ibid, pp.143 144

71. Ibid, p.144

72. Robert B Asprey, War in the Shadows (London: Little, Brown 1994), p.ix

73. Ibid, pp.179 191, 424-425

74. Shirreff, Bare Feet and Bandoliers, pp.12 14

75. Otto Heilbrunn, Warfare in the Enemy's Rear (London; George Allen & Unwin 1963), p.17

76. Ibid, p.79

77. Ibid, pp.93 94

78. Ibid, pp.168 170

79. Ibid, p.204

80. Gordon, ‘Wingate’, p.279

81. Ibid, pp.283 284, 295

82. Ibid, pp.289, 295

83. Otway, Airborne Forces, p.357

84. Ibid, pp.358 366

85. Ibid, pp.368 369

86. Ibid, pp.367 370

87. Ibid, p.372

88. See BH Liddell Hart, The Strategy of Indirect Approach (London: Faber & Faber), especially pp.212 216

89. Their correspondence is kept in the Liddell Hart Centre for Military Archives (LHCMA), King’s College, London, File No.15/5/30; see also BH Liddell Hart, The History of the Second World War (London: Cassell 1970), p.382

90. Rossetto, Wingate and the Development of Long Range Penetration, pp.v-vii, 24 27, 137 138, 438 439, 455 457

91. Shelford Bidwell, The Chindit War: The Campaign in Burma 1944 (London: Book Club Associates 1979), p.148

92. Ibid, p.148

93. Lyman, Slim, Master of War, p.2

94. Ibid, p.73

95. Ibid, pp.110 114, 183 184, 210 213

96. Ibid, pp.177 179, 185 188

97. Ibid, pp.2, 254

98. Atkins, ‘A Model of Modern Nonlinear Noncontiguous Operations’, pp.1 8

99. Ibid, p.9

100. Ibid, pp.10 11

101. Ibid, pp.14 16

102. Ibid, pp.21



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